A Bit of War History: The Recruit
Thomas Waterman Wood, 1866
About this artwork
**A Bit of War History: The Recruit** Thomas Waterman Wood painted this evocative oil on canvas in 1866, just a year after the American Civil War's end. Measuring 28¼ × 20¼ inches, the portrait captures a young recruit amid the era's turmoil, evoking the human stories behind the conflict. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing as a gift from Charles Stewart Smith in 1884, it stands as a poignant artifact of national healing and remembrance. Wood, a prominent American genre painter, excelled in character studies that highlighted everyday figures with realistic detail and emotional depth. Here, the medium's rich textures bring the soldier's uniform, firearms, and determined gaze to life, underscoring the recruit's vulnerability and resolve. As part of broader Civil War-themed works, it reflects post-war fascination with enlistment and sacrifice, immortalizing the ordinary men who shaped history. This piece invites visitors to ponder recruitment's personal toll, blending portraiture's intimacy with historical gravitas—a timeless tribute to service in divided times.